How's the mail client?
It's just Geary, I'm running it myself in Arch at the moment. It's moving nicely towards being a good Gmail interface, labels and all, but so many features are lacking right now (multiple accounts, searching, etc) that it's hard to recommend. I expect it to be awesome at some point in the future.IDK... for personal use I always just use the gmail web client. Sorry... :/
It's just Geary, I'm running it myself in Arch at the moment. It's moving nicely towards being a good Gmail interface, labels and all, but so many features are lacking right now (multiple accounts, searching, etc) that it's hard to recommend. I expect it to be awesome at some point in the future.
are there better apps than Rhythmbox? Preferably with iPod support.
Not sure about ipod support, since I don't use one, but here are some other applications that people use.
Banshee -- I thought this was Ubuntu default
Amarok
Clementine -- A fork of Amarok, I think
are there better apps than Rhythmbox? Preferably with iPod support.
Ubuntu is pretty nice like that. Nice dropdown right from the login screen.
Now hold up a sec . Isn't dropdown-selection of desktop environment from the login screen a feature of every distro and of nearly every display manager?
are there better apps than Rhythmbox? Preferably with iPod support.
No idea, but I am surprised Ubuntu kept such a power user feature, especially one that makes it easy to switch from their "vision" of Ubuntu.
The default for slim is for multiple session support. It just doesn't use a menu to switch between them.I think SLIM might not have a dropdown selection by default. I think it just reads xinitrc.
I really wouldn't call that a power user feature.
The default for slim is for multiple session support. It just doesn't use a menu to switch between them.
Clementine is the best. It's a fork or clone (not sure which) of the old Amarok 1.X series, which was awesome. Not the current Amarok, which is not awesome.Not sure about ipod support, since I don't use one, but here are some other applications that people use.
Banshee -- I thought this was Ubuntu default
Amarok
Clementine -- A fork of Amarok, I think
Sucks!Exaile
I actually use Clementine.Clementine is the best. It's a fork or clone (not sure which) of the old Amarok 1.X series, which was awesome. Not the current Amarok, which is not awesome.
Hai Linux GAF!
I am come to you from Elementary OS Luna! I come in peace via a live boot off of a usb drive. I offer you screenshots I just took of the OS. I hope we can be friends.
I really wouldn't call that a power user feature.
The default for slim is for multiple session support. It just doesn't use a menu to switch between them.
So I still have these problems on my Desktop with 12.04 - every time I start Transmission and something downloads it hangs my system for like 10 seconds every 30 seconds or so. It's basically not possible to get any stuff done while Transmission is running.
I have no problems with it on my laptop with 12.10 running.
System76 announced a new laptop today, the Bonobo Extreme.
Basically, they took a look at Ultrabooks and said, "NOPE!"
- 17.3" screen
- 32 GB RAM
- 3 TB hard drive
- 8.6 pounds
So I still have these problems on my Desktop with 12.04 - every time I start Transmission and something downloads it hangs my system for like 10 seconds every 30 seconds or so. It's basically not possible to get any stuff done while Transmission is running.
I have no problems with it on my laptop with 12.10 running.
So I had an idea that I've seen done a lot, but I never thought about till now.
So how do you take a picture of a login/lock screen? I see blogs and stuff have the pics all the time, but I for the life of me can't figure out how I could do it if I wanted to outside of I guess just taking a snapshot of an OS running in a virtual.
How would one accomplish this on a fully installed instance of an OS?
Do you have problems with other downloads?
I've been trying to setup a Postfix mailserver using Ubuntu 12.04 server version. I got the postfix part working but all the guides on the internet for configuring Dovecot seem to be using Dovecot 1 that has a waaaay different configuration file than the one my installed dovecot has (which I assume is Dovecot 2).
Can anyone link me to an easily understandable guide for setting up Dovecot 2 or should I just get an older version of Ubuntu that comes with Dovecot1?
Is there perhaps a ~*definitive best version*~ of ubuntu/linux I should use for mailserver?
deb http://xi.rename-it.nl/debian/ stable-auto/dovecot-1.2
(Open up a terminal)
$ sudo su
(type your password)
$ mkdir /usr/local/src; cd /usr/local/src
$ wget [url]http://www.dovecot.org/releases/1.2/dovecot-1.2.17.tar.gz[/url]
$ tar -zxf dovecot-1.2.17.tar.gz
$ cd dovecot-1.2.17
$ make
(wait a long time)
$ make install
$ exit
I'm getting an odd error I was wondering if I could get some help with. I am trying to install Ubuntu using Wubi. Everything downloads and installs fine, but when I reboot the computer, to takes me to Grub. While in Grub, it tells me the linux kernal is not installed. Eventually, I just have to reboot. It shows ubuntu in my windows boot loader on restart. If I select it, then I just get a flashing underscore and cannot do anything.
The same actually happened using Linux Mint's windows installer, so I am assuming I am doing something wrong.
I've been trying to setup a Postfix mailserver using Ubuntu 12.04 server version. I got the postfix part working but all the guides on the internet for configuring Dovecot seem to be using Dovecot 1 that has a waaaay different configuration file than the one my installed dovecot has (which I assume is Dovecot 2).
Can anyone link me to an easily understandable guide for setting up Dovecot 2 or should I just get an older version of Ubuntu that comes with Dovecot1?
Is there perhaps a ~*definitive best version*~ of ubuntu/linux I should use for mailserver?
Four methods, in order of decreasing terribleness:
_____
Method 4: Dovecot is for ninnies. Use Courier instead. https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Courier
I hope some of this is helpful and that it doesn't totally overwhelm you.
Valuable advice
Thanks for that. I found another guide that made configuring Dovecot 2 seem a bit more simple. I'm pretty sure I'm still doing something wrong though as things are still not working as they should be.
I need to set up a mailserver for ~40 e-mail addresses with aliases. I think I got the postfix part working, as I could send e-mail to the address I had created and read it in my server. I've never gotten it to work so that I could actually add the account to my outlook/thunderbird mail client and receive the e-mails there. I assume that is primarly a Dovecot problem and I just haven't configured it right?
What's the better way to go about managing e-mail accounts in postfix anyway? Can I just create user accounts and use those or should I do it with mysql?
At this point I'm not even sure in what format the mail user name exist. If my domain is xxx.org and my hostname is mail and my FQDN is mail.xxx.org then are the mail accounts username.xxx.org or are they username.mail.xxx.org?
I'm gonna reinstall the server again and see how well I can handle configuring Courier.
Edit: Is there a good web interface for managing all the postfix accounts?
edit: I am assuming in the above that you already had your DNS server set up so that your mail server is listed in the MX field. You might also want to look into DNS level anti-spam measures, that thingy I can't think of where you put in a list of valid Skype servers for your domain so that other servers can verify that messages aren't being injected NY a spammers.
Yeah, the port forwarding and MX stuff was what I did first before I got started.
I finally got it working.
Seems like webmin works with Dovecot 2 as I installed it and it works fine. I still prefer to do my config editing on command line though, but it's nice to have it to create new users and such.
Turns out the username I needed to use for thuderbird was simply "username", not "username.domain.com" and I had a few other configurating settings off, had to fix the maildir settings and then it started working properly.
I set it up without SSL authentication though and I still need to figure out that part. Might it be best if I got a certificate from https://www.startssl.com/?
Are you talking about dependencies on Gnome 3 in particular, or the GTK tool kit? I don't think anything depends on you running the former, maybe some official applications but probably not even that. Ubuntu doesn't even run a pure Gnome 3 desktop so anything you're seeing there and in the software center is fine at the very least.Does anything relevant/good depend on GNOME 3? I installed Ubuntu after a long hiatus because I knew the installer wouldn't give me any trouble (I still wanted to keep my W7 partition) -- last time I used Linux was around Fedora 6.
It's probably never coming back, there might be extensions making it a bit more like you want it if you're willing to look after them - check https://extensions.gnome.org/. Otherwise, XFCE (http://www.xfce.org/) is close to the Gnome 2 experience, a bit different but good and lightweight. A fork of Gnome 2 also exists, MATE (http://mate-desktop.org/). No idea how good it is.But man, I want GNOME 2 back. And no, GNOME classic/fallback in 3 isn't good enough. Don't like the way it looks and the buttons are on the wrong side.